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PREVIOUS EXHIBITION

Exaltation

Group Exhibition

July 11 - August 23, 2025

Participating Artists: Alic Brock, Maude Corriveau, Kim DeJesus, Ákos Ezer, Yoon Hyup, Darina Karpov, Mevlana Lipp, Erik Nieminen, Marlon Portales, Vadim Pugin, Jacob Rochester, Gretchen Scherer, Guillermo Serrano Amat, Stass Shpanin, Alex Sutcliffe, Takura Suzuki, Vickie Vainionpää and Andrew Woolbright.

 

PLATO is supremely excited to announce the opening of Exaltation, an eighteen-artist group exhibition dedicated to various mannerist styles of today, which will run through August 23. Exaltation characterizes our era as that of transformation and emotional charge; a time when history is being relived, recreated and reexamined through the prism of now. 

 

'I’ve been thinking about this show for several years. The final catalyst for it was Katie White’s 2024 Artnet article about the alleged rise of the Neo-Rococo movement in contemporary art. White, following Danielle Thom’s observations in ArtReview two years prior, singled out a group of female artists as those reviving the tradition of 18th-century France celebrating fashion, wealth and frivolity. Not disagreeing with White, I, however, recognized this trend as part of a bigger and more diverse movement, a sort of mannerism reflecting the turbulence, instability and both controversial and hopeful changes of our time.

 

Mannerism as a broader term largely applies to artists imitating their predecessors–who adhered to a more harmonious, classical tradition–in exaggerated and exalted ways. There are a number of periods in the history of art resonating with the current moment, not only the pre-revolutionary years in France when the uneven wealth distribution and the rich’s “let them eat brioche” attitude gave birth to the Rococo. Some of them are: the Ancient Roman empire right before the “there-is-no-tomorrow” lifestyle led to its demise millennia ago; post-1527 Italy after the sack of Rome, when the original Mannerist Style was defined and flourished; pre-WWI Europe, and Russia before the revolution of 1917, when new and Neo-Mannerist movements ran amok, responding to rapid social and technological changes, and reflecting the era’s hopes and anxieties.

 

Doechii’s single Anxiety could serve as a soundtrack for Exaltation, since it itself is a spin off of a viral song by Gotye and Kimbra, “Somebody That I Used to Know,”–an accurate description that the year 2025 could assign to 2011, when the original track was written. Anxiety is perhaps the principal sentiment of mannerist art, which proclaims an end of an era of harmony and bursts with asymmetries, diagonals, unexpected colors, precarious compositions and all sorts of emotion-stirring textures and effects: fireworks, sweat, reflections, lights, neon glow and shine of fluorescent fabric.

 

The diversity and scope of today’s mannerists are far and wide, making Exaltation a time machine with a modern twist. The Rococo is inescapable, with a literal–and very exalted–quote from Fragonard’s The Swing by Vickie Vainionpää, Vadim Pugin’s exuberant seashell attuned to the rhythm of human heart, Marlon Portales’ glistening armor, Maude Corriveau’s pastel folds and tufting and Darina Karpov’s phosphorescent dreams. Elsewhere, however, Alex Sutcliffe pays a digital-looking nod to Flemish Baroque. Takura Suzuki pays an homage to Dutch still-lifes, while stamping them with Mandarin neon signs. Erik Nieminen infuses French Neo-Classical painting with an uncanny sensuality of AI’s emotional remove.

 

Later in the time continuum, high-keyed bioformic mixed-media paintings of Mevlana Lipp transport us both to the Symbolist late 1800s and the 1970s disco culture. Alic Brock’s extravagant giants channel the decadence of both Teresa de Lempicka’s 1920’s Paris and that of Ancient Rome, spruced with an instagram-age aesthetic. Guillermo Serrano Amat’s restaurant debauchery mixes the willowy American figures of Thomas Hart Benton with the color palette and frenzy of George Grosz’s nightlife of Weimar Republic’s Berlin. 

 

Despite the palpable angst, the show’s main leitmotif is an overarching sense of optimism and dynamism. The turn of the 20th century and post-WWI years glance at us from Kim DeJesus’ radiant abstractions, a mix between James McNeill Whistler's fireworks and life-affirming, splashy canvases of American Abstract Expressionists. Even static scenes are charged with explosive energy. Jacob Rochester’s sitting boxer, perhaps about to return to the ring, evokes the eerily quiet drama of Caravaggio. Ákos Ezer’s sitting youth could break the picture plane were he to stand up straight. 

 

The planet is possibly doomed, but why sulk? Instead of decrying the ever-growing light pollution, Yoon Hyup glorifies it in a neo-pointillistic aerial-view hymn to downtown Manhattan. Andrew Woolbright’s bearded office worker is engaged in his “side hustle” with Michelangeloesque grandiosity. Like in a Noah’s arch for art, Gretchen Scherer’s French salon-meets white cube gallery joins disparate paintings of her favorite masters in one joyful unison. Stass Shpanin’s Horn Angel, originally sourced from American folk art, announces the coming of the new age with a naive and fragmented, yet sweet hopefulness. 

 

In the world where every news is breaking news and everyone can be famous for three seconds, artists are trying to grasp onto the comforting permanence of the past with a well-spirited exaltation of post-postmodernism. If the end might be near and one wants to live at the height of their emotions, in hopeful reverie, and ideally in style, who are we to judge?'

                                                                                                                                  -  Elena Platonova

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Installation Views

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Katie White, “A Neo‑Rococo Movement Is On the Rise—But What Does It All Mean?” Artnet, August 16, 2024. https://news.artnet.com/art-world/neo-rococo-artists-2524510. 

Danielle Thom, “The Return of Rococo in Contemporary Culture,” ArtReview, November 8, 2022, https://artreview.com/the-return-of-rococo-in-contemporary-culture/.

Yoon Hyup, Airborne, 2025, Acrylic on Canvas, 79 x 63 in.jpg

Yoon Hyup

Airborne, 2025

acrylic on canvas

79 x 63 in.

Vickie Vainionpaa, The Swing, 2025, oil on canvas, 58 x 48 in_edited.jpg

 Vickie Vainionpää

The Swing, 2025

oil on canvas

58 x 48 in.

Alic Brock, Lady and Mouse, 2024, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 40 in.jpeg

Alic Brock

Lady and Mouse, 2024

acrylic on canvas

60 x 48 in.

Alic Brock, Fruit Basket, 2024, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 48 in.jpeg

Alic Brock

The Fruit Basket, 2024

acrylic on canvas

60 x 48 in.

Plato-Exaltation-53-JPEG-300dpi.jpg

Maude Corriveau

Draped Threshold, 2025

oil on linen

48 x 60 in.

Kim Dejesus, Swan Math, 2025, mixed media on canvas, 59.5 x 44.jpg

Kim DeJesus

Swan Math, 2025

acrylic, oil and mixed media on canvas

59.5 x 44 in.

Alex Sutcliffe, Leda, 2025, oil and acrylic on panel, 48 x 36 in.JPG

Alex Sutcliffe

Leda, 2025

oil and acrylic on panel

48 x 36 in.

Stass Shpanin, Horn Angel, 2022, flashe paint on Canvas, 46.5 x 37 in.jpg

Stass Shpanin

Horn Angel, 2022

flashe paint on canvas

46.5 x 37 in.

Darina Karpov, Incantation II, 2024, oil on linen, 48 x 36 in.JPG

Darina Karpov

Incantation II, 2024

oil on linen

48 x 36 in.

Jacob Rochester, The Temporal Moment, 2024, oil on canvas, 48x36 in.jpeg

Jacob Rochester

The Temporal Moment, 2024

oil on canvas

36 x 48 in.

Darina Karpov, Carnivores and Cider, 2024, oil on linen, 48 x 36 in.JPG

Darina Karpov

Carnivores and Cider, 2024

oil on linen

48 x 36 in.

Mevlana Lipp, Siren, 2025, 80 x 60 cm.jpg

Mevlana Lipp

Siren, 2025

wood, velvet, sand, acrylic and ink

31.5 x 23.6 in.

Guillermo Serrano Amat

The Raid, 2025

oil on linen

35 x 27.5 in.

Erik Nieminen, Reverie, 2025, 24 x 26 in.jpg

Erik Nieminen

Reveries, 2025

oil on linen

24 x 36 in.

Gretchen Scherer, École des Beaux-Arts Painting Studio, 2025, acrylic and oil on panel, 24

Gretchen Scherer

École des Beaux-Arts Painting Studio, 2025

acrylic and oil on panel

24 x 30 in.

Andrew Woolbright, Side Hustle, 2024, oil and acrylic on canvas, 20 x 30 in..jpg

Andrew Woolbright

Side Hustle, 2024

oil and acrylic on canvas

30 x 25 in.

Alex Sutcliffe, Long Way, 2025, oil and acrylic on panel, 48 x 36 in. JPG.jpg

Alex Sutcliffe

Long Way, 2025

oil and acrylic on panel

24 x 20 in.

Marlon Portales, Dos cuerpos, 2024, Oil on canvas, 58 x 18 in, 2024.jpg

Marlon Portales

Dos Cuerpos, 2024

oil on canvas

18 x 29 in. per panel

Akos Ezer, Inaction, 2023, oil on canvas, 19.69 x 23.62 in.jpg

Ákos Ezer

Inaction, 2023

oil on canvas

19.6 x 23.6 in. 

Kim DeJesus, Teeth in the Lilac Fog, 2025, acrylic, oil and mixed media on canvas, 21 x 21

Kim DeJesus

Teeth in the Lilac Fog, 2025

acrylic, oil and mixed media on canvas

12 x 12 in.

Maude Corriveau, Cushioned Shell, 2025 oil on linen, 20 x 16 in.jpg

Maude Corriveau

Cushioned Shell, 2025

oil on canvas

20 x 16 in. 

Takura Suzuki, The Wind Speaks, 2024, Acrylic and Mixed Media on canvas, 18 x 14 in.jpg

Takura Suzuki

The Wind Speaks, 2024

acrylic and mixed media on canvas

18 x 14 in. 

Takura Suzuki, Familiar Yet Lost, 2024,Acrylic and Mixed Media on canvas, 18 x 14 in.jpg

Takura Suzuki

Familiar Yet Lost, 2024

acrylic and mixed media on canvas

18 x 14 in. 

Vadim Pugin, EDITED Sea Heart Cradle, 2025 sea urchin test, glazed earthenware, RGB LEDS,

Vadim Pugin

Sea Heart Cradle, 2025

sea urchin test, glazed earthenware, RGB LEDs, micro controller, resin, aluminum, acrylic

18 x 15 x 9 in. 

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